11 results
- Books
Face to face : a practical guide to interactive skills / Peter Honey.
Honey, Peter.Date: 1976- Books
Honey : a comprehensive survey / edited by Eva Crane.
Date: 1976, ©1975- Books
Bitter honey : recuperating the medical and scientific context of Bernard Mandeville / Phillip Hilton.
Hilton, Phillip, 1967-Date: [2010], ©2010- Books
Centres of medical excellence : medical travel and education in Europe, 1500-1789 / [edited by] Ole Peter Grell, Andrew Cunningham and Jon Arrizabalaga.
Date: [2009], ©2009- Pictures
- Online
Tom Jones and Sophia Western are seated together on a sofa as Squire Western enters the room with a riding whip. Stipple engraving by Peter Simon after J. Downman.
Downman, John, 1750-1824.Date: [1789?]Reference: 28844i- Books
Essential uses : baking soda, salt, vinegar, lemon, coconut oil, honey, and ginger : the ultimate wellness, beauty, and healthy-home bible / Tricia Swanton.
Swanton, TriciaDate: [2019]- Archives and manuscripts
- Online
Receipt Book of Jane Freestone
Date: 1843-1857Reference: MS.8207- Pictures
- Online
A philosopher and virtuoso seated in an armchair: dissatisfied with his accomplishments, he points to the need for charity to the poor. Engraving by C.F. Stoelzel, 1774, after J.E. Schenau, 1773.
Schenau, Johann Eleazar, 1737-1806.Date: [ca. 1774]Reference: 2863614i- Digital Images
- Online
Primula veris L. Primulaceae Cowslip, Herba paralysis Distribution: W. Asia, Europe. Fuchs ((1542) quotes Dioscorides Pliny and Galen, with numerous uses, from bruises, toothache, as a hair dye, for oedema, inflamed eye, and mixed with honey, wine or vinegar for ulcer and wounds, for scorpion bites, and pain in the sides and chest, and more. Lobel (1576) calls them Primula veriflorae, Phlomides, Primula veris, Verbascula. Lyte (1578) calls them Cowslippe, Petie mulleyn, Verbasculum odoratum, Primula veris, Herbae paralysis and Artheticae. Along with cowslips and oxeslips, he says they are 'used dayly among other pot herbes, but in Physicke there is no great account of them. They are good for the head and synewes ...'. Like other herbals of the 16th and 17th century, the woodcuts leave one in no doubt that Primula veris was being written about. However, other translators of Dioscorides (Gunther, 1959 with Goodyear's 1655 translation
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Primula veris L. Primulaceae. Cowslip, Herba paralysis Distribution: W. Asia, Europe. Fuchs ((1542) quotes Dioscorides Pliny and Galen, with numerous uses, from bruises, toothache, as a hair dye, for oedema, inflamed eye, and mixed with honey, wine or vinegar for ulcer and wounds, for scorpion bites, and pain in the sides and chest, and more. Lobel (1576) calls them Primula veriflorae, Phlomides, Primula veris, Verbascula. Like other herbals of the 16th and 17th century, the woodcuts leave one in no doubt that Primula veris was being written about. However, other translators of Dioscorides (Gunther, 1959 with Goodyear's 1655 translation
Dr Henry Oakeley- Books
The religion of fools? : superstition past and present / edited by S.A. Smith and Alan Knight.
Date: 2008